Economic Development

$430,000 federal grant to go towards film job training

More money is on its way to Michigan, thanks to its benchmark film tax incentives. However, this money isn't coming from Hollywood. The U.S. Dept of Labor has awarded a $430,000 grant to the Detroit Workforce Development Department to help train people for jobs in the film industry.The grant will create a curriculum to train people in the production side of movie making, such as film production technicians. The students will be taught and mentored by members of the International Alliance of Theatrical and Stage Employees."There is no other program in the state that brings in the union," says Richard Jewell, a spokesman for the Michigan Film Office. "These are the people who are trained and experienced in this field."The year-long program run out of the Wayne County Community College District features normal classes and hands-on experiences. Also included is a six-week paid student internship. The students, who are screened by Goodwill Industries, will create a public service announcement for the non-profit.About 45-60 students are expected to graduate from the program over the next two years. If successful, it could be used as a template for similar workforce training initiatives across the state.Source: Richard Jewell, a spokesman for the Michigan Film OfficeWriter: Jon Zemke

Latest in Economic Development
It’s almost spring, and transit centers are sprouting in Ann Arbor

Ann Arbor is known for flowers and trees sprouting up in the spring, but you can add transit centers to that list now that U-M is joining AATA, SEMCOG, and the city in making plans for a new transit center.Excerpt:Transit centers are now development du jour in Ann Arbor. The University of Michigan recently unveiled plans to develop its own student-transit center. This plan joins others in the works for the Blake Transit Center, Fuller Road Station, and the new stop for the Detroit-Ann Arbor commuter rail line."Having these stations really transforms our community," says Nancy Shore, executive director of the getDowntown program. "It's really changing the environment so people can be more comfortable when they use these other forms of transportation."Read the rest of the story here.

Design Evolution Workshop opens in Detroit’s Burtonplex

A trio of young architects are trying to change the game in Detroit's newest small business incubator - the Burton-Plex.Patrick Jones (27), Derek Roberts (32), and James Willer (35) opened Design Evolution Workshop in January after spending a year working on the concept. The firm's ethos revolves around allowing architects to become true leaders in the built environment so they can have more influence when it comes to making the best long-term decisions."Instead of being leaders in the built environment we have been set on the back burner," says Willer, the firm's CFO. He adds that he has seen more than his fair share of architects left cowering in coffee shop corners after being lectured by developers, but his firm will empower them to have a stronger voice when it comes to making people recognize the long-term accountability of what they build.Design Evolution Workshop does that with social-media oriented software. This allows developers to run project ideas past a community of architects and stakeholders. The end result is a range of choices of how best to proceed and what the short- and long-term consequences will be for the project."This competitive process is community vetted so the best project rises to the top," Willer says.Design Evolution Workshop is also working with the city of Detroit to involve more younger architects in the deconstruction of the Motor City's neglected building stock. The idea is to utilize the region's out-of-work architects (Willer and Roberts have both been laid off recently as the architecture world contracts) and give younger ones a better appreciation for the existing built environment."We're potentially losing a whole generation of young architects because they can't get their accreditation hours," Willer says.Source: James Willer, CFO of Design Evolution WorkshopWriter: Jon Zemke

Zingerman’s expansion, Library Lot become talk of Ann Arbor

Zingerman's is making another go at expanding its Kerrytown headquarters and is making its intentions known to anyone who will listen.Excerpt:Two of Ann Arbor's biggest project proposals are about to become the talk of the town – the Library Lot and the Zingerman's expansion.The people behind Zingerman's are making another push toward expanding their deli and coffee shop facilities in Kerrytown. They will be holding a public meeting about their plans at 5 p.m. on March 8 at the deli, 422 Detroit St. Zingerman's has grown into a family of businesses with facilities all over the city, but its headquarters remains in the storefront in downtown Ann Arbor."We've been doing business there for 28 years in March," says Paul Saginaw, co-founder of Zingerman's. "We'd like to keep doing business here for another 28 years. The original building isn't built for the type of intensity it currently hosts."Read the rest of the story here.

Global Wave Today reaches from Rochester to China

Felicia Cheng wants to harness the economic opportunity evident in China into her start-up, Global Wave Today.The Rochester-based firm specializes in helping local firms make the leap halfway around the world into the emerging markets in China. The idea is to bring the proven products and services sold here to the rapidly growing sectors in China. Cheng's firm facilitates this through its experienced staff and contacts abroad."People are kind of afraid of doing business overseas," Cheng says. "I have the knowledge and resources to help them do that."Right now she is helping seven firms from across the U.S. and Canada make that jump and take advantage of those markets. She gives an example of how there are 300 million Internet users and 63 million Internet shoppers in China, and that's only 38 percent of its population."There is huge room for growth for companies to take advantage of," Cheng says.Right now Global Wave Today is aiming to take advantage of its own growth prospects. The company is made up of Cheng, who holds an MBA from the University of Michigan and a resume with GM and China experience all over it, one intern, and a partner in China. She hopes to add a few more people this year as the business grows.Source: Felicia Cheng, CEO and co-founder of Global Wave TodayWriter: Jon Zemke

State tells Lincoln Park to save the Mellus

A Michigan Historic Preservation Officer has sent a strongly worded letter to the Lincoln Park Downtown Development Authority, urging local officials to save the Mellus Newspaper building in the Downriver suburb's downtown. "The rehabilitation of a historic building utilizing potentially available Historic Tax Credits and Brownfield Tax Credits can have much broader economic benefits to the surrounding area than demolition of the building for vacant property," State Historic Preservation Officer Brian D. Conway writes in the letter. "What we recommend ... is that the building be mothballed for continued marketing to potential developers. That is, minimal repairs should be made to the building to make it safe and to avoid damage from water infiltration and vandalism. The option of making a building sound for future redevelopment is more in line with the stated goals and mission of the Lincoln Park DDA than creating a vacant lot."Conway's letter also questions the DDA's intentions of purchasing the Mellus, which is on the National Register of Historic Places. The letter says the building should have been marketed for redevelopment with adjoining structures instead of moving so aggressively toward demolition, a move that is "in violation of the spirit and intent of the DDA Act.""Your report provides no discussion of how and for how long the Lincoln Park DDA marketed the building for redevelopment, nor is there any discussion of attempts to package redevelopment incentives, such as federal historic tax credits," Conway writes. "Indeed, because the Lincoln Park DDA's ownership of the building has been so brief, we question how a sufficient marketing effort would even have been possible in such a short time."Whether or not city officials follow the recommendation has yet to be shown. The DDA's attorney, David Tamsen, sent a letter earlier this week saying that if any member of the DDA board requests a special meeting about the building by Friday, the board will reconsider the issue. Otherwise "the board's previous decision to demolish the buildings will be implemented." Leslie Lynch-Wilson, president of the Lincoln Park Preservation Alliance and a proponent of saving the Mellus, said she expects the demolition will be discussed at the DDA's regularly scheduled meeting on March 11. The future of the historic building remains in flux until then. Lynch-Wilson maintains the DDA never made a good-faith effort to redevelop the building and bought it with only the intention of demolition. In fact, she believes the buildings could be redeveloped right now but some city officials are stubbornly against any sort of reasonable redevelopment of the Mellus."We all know why they bought it. Because Frank Vaslo (Lincoln Park's mayor) wants to tear it down," Lynch-Wilson says.And so the Mellus building sits awaiting a firm decision on its future. The 1940s-era building at 1661 Fort St. served as the home to Lincoln Park's local newspaper, then owned by William Mellus, for generations. The Mellus still has its original porcelain enameled Moderne commercial building exterior, while the adjacent Pollak (named after Pollak Jewelers and also up for demolition) retains its terrazzo entrance sidewalk.The buildings had been vacant for several years before the Lincoln Park DDA purchased them last year. Some city officials call them blight, but the Lincoln Park Preservation Alliance argues that their salvation is an important step toward preserving downtown Lincoln Park's heritage and encouraging business and job creation. In fact the LPPA even recruited a developer who wanted to rehab both buildings and another adjacent one the DDA also owns so he could move his business to Lincoln Park. This could have created dozen of jobs. The DDA turned him down because the two sides could not agree on a price for the third building.Source: Martha MacFarlane Faes, cultural resource protection manager for the Michigan Historic Preservation Office and Leslie Lynch-Wilson, president of the Lincoln Park Preservation AllianceWriter: Jon Zemke

Paper Street Motors opens biz incubator in Ferndale

What was once a home to Metro Detroit's old economy is about to become a breeding center for its new economy. That home is Paper Street Motors.Andy Didorosi, 23, is turning a 20,000-square-foot warehouse into a small business incubator. The idea, started and perfected by the Russell Industrial Center in Detroit, is to provide the ground floor for entrepreneurs by providing big spaces at small prices."We can do things that we wouldn't be able to do normally because we have these big hulking warehouses," Didorosi says. "And it's cheap enough that you can rent space and do something with tip money."The Ferndale resident was looking for a new home for his race car business when he stumbled upon the vacant warehouse at 1151 Jarvis, just southeast of the inner-ring suburb's downtown. He planned to take it on with some friends and then realized he needed more friends, so he decided to turn the building into a business.It costs $175 a month and up for office space and $300 a month and up for warehouse space. Didorosi took the name for the incubator from the movie Fight Club and plans to give the space a retro style."We're going for a vintage factory style," Didorosi says. "We're installing big red letters above it like in the old factories. It's sort of retro cool."Source: Andy Didorosi, owner of Paper Street MotorsWriter: Jon Zemke

Utica plans pedestrian bridge over Clinton River

Getting to downtown Utica is about to become much easier, as the Macomb County suburb plans to build a pedestrian bridge over the Clinton River.The city recently received $303,192 in federal Transportation Enhancement funding to fill the financing gap for the $452,525 project. Work is expected to begin this spring and wrap up by the end of September. The bridge will connect the Macomb Orchard Trail to downtown Utica as well as the Clinton River Trail in Oakland County. It will provide pedestrians and bicyclists with a safe place to cross the river without having to navigate the busy Van Dyke/M-59 intersection. Utica Mayor Jacqueline Noonan expects the bridge will have a big impact on several fronts."It's nature. It's economic. It's community," Noonan says. "We're just so excited and proud."The project is one of the final pieces of the Macomb County Bike/Hike Master Plan. Utica and other Macomb County communities have been working on building that series of bike trails and paths for 22 years. This bridge will connect Utica to the Huron Clinton Metroparks at Metro Beach and Stoney Creek.Source: Jacqueline Noonan, mayor of UticaWriter: Jon Zemke

GLEQ contest offers $100,000 to entrepreneurs

One local start-up will win $100,000 soon, thanks to the Great Lakes Entrepreneurs' Quest SmartZone Award.The contest will award the grand prize, along with several other smaller cash prizes, this spring. The $100,000 would be a loan that could serve as convertible debt, which means the start-up could turn it into equity in the firm as part of a venture capital deal or just pay back the loan. But the contest isn't just about the one company that wins, but all of the firms in the competition."Even if they don't win the $100,000 they're involved in the process that could introduce them to angel investors and qualify them for the Michigan Pre-Seed Capital Fund," says Diane Durance, executive director of the Ann Arbor-based Great Lakes Entrepreneurs’ Quest. "It's a way to help these companies bridge the funding gap."The competition is open to all Michigan entrepreneurs that register to participate by March 5, and it requires a SmartZone sponsor. Business plans are due April 23 for the SmartZone Award and May 7 for the New Business Idea and Emerging Company categories. Top prizes are: $5,000 in New Business Idea; $25,000 in Emerging Company; and the $100,000 pre-seed investment in the SmartZone Award category. Winners will be announced at the GLEQ SmartZone Awards Event on June 10 in Lansing.For information, click here.Source: Diane Durance, executive director of the Ann Arbor-based Great Lakes Entrepreneurs' QuestWriter: Jon Zemke

Farmington Hills’ Riley Skatepark wins design award

Riley Skatepark is earning mainstream props after becoming an instant hit with the skating crowd when it opened last summer.The Farmington Hills-based skatepark received a Facility Design Award from the Michigan Recreation & Park Association. The award recognizes the skatepark's innovative design, functionality, aesthetics, and positive community impact. It also helps that there isn't a comparable skatepark within reasonable driving distance."There really is nothing in the Midwest that compares to it," says Bryan Farmer, recreation superintendent for Farmington Hills.Riley Skatepark goes beyond the typical concrete hills, ramps, and rails that dominate the stereotypical skate parks in the Midwest. Riley has an eight-foot-tall cylinder that resembles a sewer pipe built into the ground instead of above it and a variety of in-ground features resembling concrete pits and ditches. The idea is to give the park a "West Coast" feel that most local skaters have yet to experience in Metro Detroit.The 29,000-square-foot venue is the newest attraction at Founders Sports Park at 35500 Eight Mile Road between Gill and Halstead roads, near the Farmington Hills Ice Arena. It attracts about 150 people a day and hosts a number of skateboarding events. A national competition is set to take place there in 2011."Pretty much all day long there are people there," Farmer says.Source: Bryan Farmer, recreation superintendent for Farmington HillsWriter: Jon Zemke

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